Category: Campus Life

  • Igbo students hold summit

    Igbo students hold summit

    The Igbo Students Union, University of Lagos will hold its maiden National leadership summit in memory of Late Professor Eni Njoku, the first Vice Chancellor of University of Lagos on Tuesday, 16th July, 2013 by 10 A.M. at the Main Auditorium, University of Lagos, Akoka .

    In a release jointly signed by the president of the body, Aka Francis O , his secretary, Emodi Blessing and the chairman of the planning committee, Iheanacho Bright , the summit with the theme “Education, Leadership and the Task of Nation-building: Cultivating the Culture of Excellence” will help address leadership and education challenges in the country.

    According to the release, the event will be chaired by elder statesman, legal icon and former presidential candidate Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, the first Executive Governor of Abia State and National Chairman of ANPP His Excellency, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu as the Chief Guest Speaker; invited guests of honour includes Senator Victor Ndoma-Egba SAN, Senate Majority Leader and Senator (Amb.) Matthew I. Nwagwu, Chairman Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs among others. The event is also expected to attract over 2,000 young leaders across the country.

    Igbo Students Union, an umbrella body for all students of Igbo origin, numbering about 4,000, who are currently studying various courses in the University. Her three cardinal objectives include; carrying out those activities that contribute towards the advancement of knowledge; nurturing future leaders of excellence; and promoting the people’s cultural heritage.

  • Students honour VC

    Students honour VC

    The Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the Ibrahim Babangida University (IBBU), Lapai, Niger State, Prof Ibrahim Adamu Kolo, has been honoured with an award of excellence by the members of Students Counselling Association of Nigeria (SCASSON) for his contributions to the development of the association.

    Presenting the award to the VC, the National President of the association, Bako Ayuba, said Prof Kolo was recognised with the award for being an “icon of hope” and pioneer grand patron for the association.

    He also expressed appreciation to the VC for his “unwavering support” to the association, pledging to work vigorously in order to lift the association to a new height.

    Appreciating the students, Prof Kolo expressed said he was elated with the honour, promising to do more for the association to an enviable level.

    He added that he was convinced that the gesture was a product and manifestation of concerted efforts made by the founding members of the association to nurture character molders for the development of society, admonishing the executive members of SCASSON to imbibe the professional ethics of service to humanity.

    The VC assured the association of his full support towards the successful hosting of its first international conference slated to hold in Owerri, Imo State.

  • Securing our campuses

    Eight decades ago, precisely on May 23, 1932, in Sao Paolo, Brazil, four students: Martins, Miragaia, Drausio and Camargo were shot dead by government troops while protesting the 1930 coup and the dictatorial government of Gertulio Vargas. What was their offence? They agitated for a constitutional government. Their death spurred an uprising in Sao Paolo that led to the Constitutional Revolution of 1932. Although, the main demands of the revolutionary movement was granted at the end of the day, the blood of the four students had been spilled to usher in a new era.

    In a related event, that reminds me again of the UNIPORT 4. Their case was not so different from that of the Sao Paolo 4. In fact, the UNIPORT 4 were victims of a communal sacrifice. The quartet of Ugonna Kelechi Obuzor, Mike Lloyd Toku, Biringa Chidiaka Lordson and Tekena Erikena were lynched by a heartless mob in a community that is supposed to host and protect them. The manner in which they were lynched and subsequently torched was symptomatic of the Stone Age. If Capt. William Lynch were to be alive to witness this tale of savagery, he would cry his eyes out forgetting the fact that the term ‘lynch’ was coined from his name. It is now over eight months after that incident of October 5, 2012 was staged just like one of those scenes in Spartacus, but justice has not been served.

    The Federal Polytechnic, Mubi in Adamawa State, however, witnessed one of the worst infernal carnage. The Mubi Massacre was an extermination plot of apocalyptic dimension where students were brutally butchered with reckless abandon. According to media reports, the executioners were said to have come with a hit list and a roll call was made with the respondents gruesomely slaughtered. With the contradictory reports pertaining to the actual cause of such monumental bloodbath, one can also predict the case would lead nowhere and could be swept under carpet afterwards.

    An attack on a gathering of Christian students holding services in the sport complex and lecture theatre in Bayero University, Kano State was one too many. The bitter killing of those students was needless and uncalled for. That gory incident really exposed how vulnerable our institutions are. How could the murder of those innocent students on a peaceful gathering go a long way to quench the insatiable thirst of a venomous faceless group, many are wont to ask?

    July 10, 1999 was a day students of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, would not forget in a hurry. It was a day the devil descended in its full regalia to establish a throne in Awolowo Hall. The ogre was freely let loose in the university as the mortal flesh of promising young men was openly sacrificed. That onslaught marked the re-birth of a collective security awakening which could still be felt till date among the students.

    This chain of student murder underscores the apparent laxity of the government and our institution’s management in curbing the stratospheric rate of student insecurity in our campuses. In no sane society would the government assume a clueless pose when students in their intellectual treasure house are being reckless subjected to incessant butchery.

    It is no longer news that the country is engulfed with overwhelming security challenges ranging from the Boko Haram insurgency to the non-stop kidnappings. In the face of this present reality, the point here is that, there is an urgent need to acknowledge students’ security as a catalyst that will ensure a productive output from the ivory towers across the country.

    Insecurity has always been a major factor why our higher institutions earn a constant placement below that of their counterparts in neighbouring African countries. What bothers me most often is the role of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) in ensuring that Nigerians students are secured in and outside their campuses. I guess student security is not captured in their agenda since all we do hear about this students’ body is its annual election and incessant toothless condemnation of unfavourable policies.

    The management of our higher institutions should, as a matter of urgent necessity, sit on a roundtable discussion with traditional and political leaders of the host communities where various student hostels are located to ensure a safe ambience in which the students would enjoy a relative peace among the indigenous people. In particular reference to the case involving the UNIPORT 4, one fact must be made clearer here. Evil is evil, no matter the colour it wears. Even if it was a case of real theft or clash of interest among cult groups, they did not deserve such a macabre punishment meted on them by people that were meant to shield them. The relationship between students and their host communities ought to be mutual in such a way that they would work hand-in-hand to ensure the security of all and sundry.

    However, we look forward to students as the future leaders that will steer the course of our nation. Therefore, a bid to protect them means protecting a national treasury. Or are we going to wait until a state of emergency is declared on our higher institutions?

     

    Taiwo is a Corps member, NYSC Ibadan

     

     

  • ‘IBBU medical college underway’

    ‘IBBU medical college underway’

    In its drive to ensure immediate take-off medical college of the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBBU), Lapai, Niger State government has constituted a technical committee to ensure smooth delivery of the college.

    Inaugurating the committee in the conference room of the state Ministry of Tertiary Education, Commissioner for Tertiary Education, Dr Muhammad Bashar Nuhu, said the lacuna created as a result of short supply of medical professionals in the state with increasing population had informed the government’s decision on the establishment of a medical school in the state-owned institution.

    He disclosed that the committee’s term of reference included a strategic plan towards the realisation of the minimum standard required for establishing the school, identifying areas where the university could leverage in terms of minimum standards, and recommending the cost implication.

    The Commissioner expressed optimism that the committee would deliver on the assignment, assuring that the ministry was ready to give it all the necessary support and co-operation to the members for success within four weeks the committee has to submit its report.

    The committee is headed by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Administration), Dr Muhammad Yakubu Auna. Other members are Dr Hassan Jimada, Dr Abdullahi Usman Imam, Dr Muhammad Makusidi and Mrs Jonanna Dufin Pada. The Director of Academics in the Ministry, Alhaji Muhammad Kudu, is to serve as the secretary.

    Responding on behalf of the chairman, Dr Auna promised to justify the confidence reposed in the committee and expressed appreciation for the opportunity provided to the members to serve.

     

  • Their brothers’ keeper

    Their brothers’ keeper

    Some students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) left their academic engagements to participate in humanitarian service. OLUWAFEMI OGUNJOBI (400-Level Language Arts, OAU) reports that 82 students donated blood during the programme organised by the Redeemed Christian Fellowship (RCF).

     

    “Efforts by anybody to save a fellow human being from dangerous situation shall be rewarded by God and such humanitarian undertaking will outlive the benefactor.” These were the words of Oluwole Ajibola, 400-Level English and head of Pearls of Grace, an editorial arm of the Redeemed Christian Fellowship (RCF), during a two-day humanitarian exercise organised by the fellowship.

    The programme, tagged “Healthfare 2013” and held at the White House basement of the Faculty of Science, witnessed high turnout of students, who donated blood and received counselling on health several issues.

    After the blood donation exercise, members of the fellowships also visited an orphanage to show love to the motherless babies.

    Oluwole said the phrase “Healthfare” was a “two in one package” derived from health and welfare, adding that the health part was to save lives while the welfare part was to show love and care by visiting the orphanage. He said the exercise was informed by the belief of members of the fellowship to be contributors to continuous existence of humanity. “We are not just writers, but life givers,” he quipped.

    During the blood donation exercise, which started in the morning, students voluntarily came out of their hostels to freely give out pints of blood to the needy.

    Medical personnel of the OAU Teaching Hospital (OAUTH) and medical students of the institution conducted the exercise.

    Sharing her experience with CAMPUSLIFE after she donated blood, Naimat Adeosun, 200-Level English Language said: “Donating blood does not occur to me as something to be scared about; I see the gesture as an effort to save lives.”

    A 400-Level Medical student and the Vice President of the fellowship, Michael Alabi, was joyful when he approached the medical personnel for test before donating his blood, saying: “Though I donated last month for a patient, who urgently needed blood at the hospital, if am tested okay and fit for another, I am ready.”

    Mrs B. Bolarinwa, an official of the OAUTH said: “The pints of blood taken from the donors will be made available for victims of accidents, sick people in hospital wards, pregnant women and infants undergoing blood transfusion. The blood would not just be given out but we will ensure they are screened and free of HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), hepatitis B and Hepatitis B Virus .”

    The President of the fellowship, Elijah Oyewole, quoting Bible verses, said it was good to pay tithe on everything, adding: “When you pay tithes on your material things, you should also pay tithes of your blood. I have been to hospitals and come across those that are in dire need of blood. The onus rests on us as life givers to support this humanitarian course.”

    About 82 students donated by the time the exercise was concluded.

    Members of the fellowship left the campus around 4pm the following day for Solid Rock Orphanage.

    They were received by the head of the home, who simply gave her name as Reverend Ayoola. Speaking with our correspondent on her behalf, one of the orphans, identified as Oluwaseun, who is studying at Federal Polytechnic, Ede, said the orphanage was established 18 years with the revelation to cater for the less-privileged and to raise them to be humans that the society would be proud of.

    Oluwaseun said: “We do not enjoy support from government of the day; but depend on God and gift items from students like you.”

    The visiting students, who interacted with the children and asked about their academic status and their spiritual wellbeing, promised that the fellowship members would be visiting the home often.

  • A new beginning

    A new beginning

    Thousands of freshers admitted into Nasarawa State University, Keffi (NSUK) took the oath at a ceremony marked with cultural display and drama by various indigenous organisations, KAMALUDDEEN ABUBAKAR (200-Level Geography) reports.

     

    By 7:30am, celebration had begun in the Nasarawa State University, Keffi (NSUK). Freshers recently admitted by the institution were joined by their parents and relatives to mark their matriculation ceremony held last week.

    Clad in their matriculation gowns and caps to fit, the students moved into the convocation square, the venue of the event. Beaming with smile and expressing joy, the freshers welcomed the body of principal officers, which was led by the Acting Vice-Chancellor, Prof Aminu Salihu Mika’ilu.

    In his speech, Prof Mika’ilu congratulated the students for their success during the strict admission exercise. “I wish to welcome you, our dear matriculating students, to Nasarawa State University. After the oath you have taken today, you have now become part of the university community with all the rights and privileges of being a member of this unique institution,” he said.

    The VC told the students to consider themselves lucky for scaling the screening hurdle, advising them to take their studies seriously and refrain from cultism, examination malpractices and vices that could terminate their academic careers.

    “You must avoid cultism, examination malpractices and vices such as indecent dressing, drug abuse, theft, sexual harassment and fighting in order to ensure continue peaceful atmosphere and stability. Your primary purpose in this university is the pursuit of academic excellence. You are, therefore, expected to study hard,” he charged.

    Prof Mika’ilu announced the donation of a water tanker and a 500KVA generator from the state government to the university. The highpoint of the ceremony was the administration of oath on the newly admitted students and cultural display and drama by members of various students’ organisations on campus.

    Some of the freshres and their parents spoke to our correspondent after the event.

    Ahmad Suleiman, 100-Level Computer Science, expressed gratitude to God to have scaled through the rigour of admission process. “I appreciate it that I am today a student of this great citadel of learning. I understand that only 10 per cent of the prospective students were offered admission this year and I am one of those people. I consider this a good reason for me to study hard and excel in flying colours,” he said.

    “For six consecutive years, I have been seeking a placement into this school and this is the year that my admission came to be. I feel highly fulfilled. It has always been my dream to study in this university; thank God I have fulfilled this. I found the environment accommodating,” Justina Samson said.

    A direct entry student, who spoke in anonymity, expressed worry over the capacity of the lecture rooms, saying: “You hardly get a word from the lecturers because of overcrowding, which has made learning difficult for some of us. I urge management to provide more lecture rooms.”

  • ‘We have become change agents’

    ‘We have become change agents’

    The first of the bi-annual CAMPUSLIFE Correspondents’ Workshop was held last weekend, with the theme: Building up a drug-free and non-cultist generation. PHILIP OKORODUDU (500-Level Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering, Delta State University), OLUWAFEMI OGUNJOBI (400-Level Language Arts, Obafemi Awolowo University), MODESTUS DIKO (400-Level Microbiology, Olabisi Onabanjo University), HALIMAH AKANBI (200-Level Law, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto) and KINGSLEY AMATANWEZE (400-Level Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, University of Nigeria, Nsukka) report.

    By 7am last Saturday, the Elizabeth Hall of Citilodge Suite, a four-star hotel in the heart of Lekki, Lagos, was set for the day’s event. After breakfast at 7:20am, the participants filed into the hall.

    They were student-writers from different institutions attending the first of the three-day bi-annual CAMPUSLIFE Correspondents’ Workshop hosted by The Nation in collaboration with Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited and Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) Limited.

    With the theme: Building up a drug- free and non-cultist generation, the workshop was a platform for the re-orientation of youths on vices that have turned campuses to breeding grounds for thugs and drug addicts.

    The event began with a tour of the headquarters of The Nation on Friday. Conducting the students round the media outfit, Wale Ajetunmobi, CAMPUSLIFE co-ordinator, explained the processes of newspaper production and activities of the newsroom. He also took the students to the Pre-Press and Press Hall to show them how newspapers are printed and arranged.

    A few hours later, the students were at the Ikeja plant of the Coca-Cola, which is referred to as the largest producing plant in the world. Before the correspondents were taken round the facility, they were given some guidelines for the tour. These included the wearing of safety boots; moving along the safety tracks and no taking of photographs. Ms Peace Emele, a member of staff in the Public Relations Unit, conducted the students round.

    A production engineer, who led the students through the process of coke production, said the production of the cola drink started from the Returnable Glass Bottle (RGB) line from where the liquid would go to the de-palletiser station and then to the un-parker, which separates the bottles from the crates to the washing machine.

    According to the engineer, the bottles are washed by a machine before they are moved to the Caustic Department. To ensure that the bottles are clean, they are washed with soda and hot water after which they pass through a series of sections for perfect cleanliness, he said. The final process in the production of coke, according to the manager, is the palletiser for the packaging of the final product to ease transportation. He said at least 10 million Nigerians consume Coca-Cola products daily.

    Students listened with rapt attention and the hall of the Citilodge Suite was quiet as The Nation’s Online Editor, Mr Lekan Otufodunrin, Mr Agbo Agbo and Mr Emeka Mba, Community Affairs Manager, Coca Cola Nigeria, took turns to welcome and talk to them on the activities of their firms.

    At 10:10am, the first speaker, Mr Femi Falana (SAN), a rights activist, walked in. Spontaneously, the hall erupted in excitement as the students rose on sighting him.

    To welcome their alumnus, students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) in Ile-Ife, Osun State, among the participants, stood up and rendered the school anthem. Falana said he was excited to be amidst of the youths.

    Speaking on the theme, Falana, who spoke extempore, said: “I have come here to engage students in what Walter Rodney called the pedagogy of the oppressed.” The expression attracted applause.

    Regretting that the quality of education has fallen, Falana said during his days at the university, the average student had hope of a bright future. He said when the nation’s education was hijacked by leaders of questionable pedigree, the quality of education began a steady decline.

    Blaming the rot in the economy on the leadership’s shortsightedness, Falana said: “In 1955, free primary education was initiated in the defunct Western Region. Decades after, it was nationalised and when I gained admission into the University of Ife in 1977, the bursary we got was enough to sustain us through our stay on campus. But, due to the mismanagement of the economy, all our dreams and hopes were shattered in the 1980s.”

    He said: “If you engage in examination malpractices in those days, the Students’ Union Government would not celebrate you. They would sacrifice you to serve as a deterrent to others engaging in the vice. But, today, the reverse is the case. We must take up the challenge and teach our children that criminality does not pay. We now have parents buying Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) papers for their children, who could not defend the results they got through the misbegotten process.”

    Criticising the present-day students’ unionism, which he described as a money-spinner for student-leaders, Falana said Students Union Governments (SUGs) have been taken over by sycophants, who only massage the ego of moneybags and politicians.

    He bemoaned the failure of government to give scholarship to indigent students and the high level of corruption in the education system, noting: “The Nigeria’s ruling class is shortsighted, very unpatriotic, selfish and irresponsible.” He charged the students to rise up against criminality and reject poor living conditions on campus, saying: “It is your constitutional right to protest but make it peaceful.”

    Falana, who confessed to be an avid reader of CAMPUSLIFE pages, pledged to offer legal assistance to any student who is victimised for fighting just causes.

    A participant, Idris Abubakar, who is allegedly being victimised by the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), was told by the lawyer to contact him for free legal assistance.

    He stressed that drug abuse, gangsterism, cultism, were vices not synonymous with students during his undergraduate days.

    Falana deplored what he calls the extreme religious inclination of Nigerians and the government, which he said spends public funds to offset private religious needs.

    “Nigeria is the only country where you can block the only major road just because you want to pray. Ours is the only country in any modern world that pays people to go to Jerusalem and Mecca. Billions that should be spent on education and eradicating dangerous diseases in the country are used for these purposes. Even some of those who have looted the country’s treasury go to churches and mosques to say their prayers.

    “I have read the Bible from Genesis to Revelation, no less than five times, because that was the only book you could read when I was in detention, and I did not see where it was decreed that a Christian shall perform any pilgrimage with sponsorship from the government.”

    To cleanse the society and rid the polity of anomalies, Falana charged the students to expose their friends and family members that are criminals. He urged the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) to retrace its step from being sycophantic, saying the students’ body must be revolutionary and progressive as it used to be in the 1970s.

    Quoting Franz Fanon to end the session, Falana said: “The future will have no pity on those youths who have the opportunity to challenge their oppressors but have taken solace to act as neutral observers.”

    He challenged the students to deploy the social media as a tool to engage leadership and transform the country.

    After his lecture, representatives of the student-writers presented CAMPUSLIFE branded shirt in appreciation of his coming.

    Mrs. Stella Ngwoke, Assistant Director, Narcotics, Drug Demand Reduction, Nigeria Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), took the students on the effects of drug abuse.

    Mrs. Ngwoke defined drug abuse as the use of illicit drugs or the abuse of prescription drugs for purposes other than those for which they are indicated or in a manner or quantity other than directed. She said the abuse of drugs among young people of between 11 and 35 years was not a weakness but a sickness which causes real changes in the brain, causing the user to crave for the intake of more of the destructive substances.

    Listing some of the drugs being abused by the youths, Mrs. Ngwoke said alcohol remained the most commonly abused substance in the world. Drug abuse afflicts all countries.

    Urging parents to caution their children against the use of harmful substances, Mrs. Ngwoke said: “Give clear messages that using drugs is not acceptable; don’t assume that your child knows your views. Parents must be good and active listeners and be alert to both spoken and implied messages of their children during discussions. Parents must know their children’s whereabouts because children who are not monitored are at greater risk of drug use at earlier age. Unsupervised parties or activities are open invitations to drug use and parents must have open, honest and sincere conversations with their children on the consequences of using hard drugs.”

    After the workshop, the students engaged in humanitarian service. They visited Treasure of Love Missionaries of Charity at Alapere in Ketu, a Lagos suburb. They were received by Sister Lilly, an Indian Catholic devotee, who took them round the home to see the children being taken care of.

    “In line with Mother Theresa’s philosophy of charity, this home was established in Lagos in 1993 to cater for children that are physically-challenged, abandoned by their parents or stigmatised because of a particular disease or infection. They are children that were picked in trash cans, under the bridge, on the streets and slums. Even, normal ones are also adopted,” Sister Lilly said.

    Explaining the drive behind the orphanage, Sister Lilly said: “God is seen in these children and with the hope of a bright future.”

    Asked how the home is funded, she said all it depends on were divine grace and donations from religious bodies, corporate organisations and well-meaning individuals.

    Some of the materials donated included three cartons of diapers, treated mosquito nets and cartons of water. For about 30 minutes, the student-writers played with the children, who were happy to see them.

    Gilbert Alasa, 400-Level Foreign Languages, University of Benin (UNIBEN), said: “I was moved to tears seeing the abandoned children with such physical and mental disabilities. I saw despair in their eyes. I felt the pain of loneliness in their voices and a yearning for some love. I think it is important we find time to visit these forsaken flock and feel their pulse. We can only build a cohesive society when we take moral actions to save these fellows on the other side of the spectrum.”

    Damilola Olayemi, Mass Communication graduate, Redeemer’s University (RUN), said: “It is not in their self-will to have found themselves at this side of life and so giving to them equates to sowing into destinies to fulfil purposes.”

    On Sunday, the students returned to their campuses, with majority of them saying they had been turned to change agents by the sponsors of the event.

  • A comedy taken too far

    Students of the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, who were preparing for examination, left their studies to ‘christen’a baby born in the toilet of Moremi Hall penultimate Wednesday. KEMI BUSARI (400-Level Political Science) reports that it was a display riddled with drama and comedy.

     

    Examination fever was still gripping the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, but some students seemed insulated from it. Students reading for exam suddenly left their studies to organise a ‘naming ceremony’ for a baby that was born in Moremi Hall’s toilet penulitmate Wednesday by Oyinlola Rotimi Diana, a 300-Level Agricultural Extension and Rural Development student.

    Some students gathered themselves and moved from one classroom to another to call more students to join them in ‘christening’ of the baby.

    The ‘naming ceremony’ started in Awo Café in the Awolowo Hall. From there, the students moved to one hall to another.

    Oyinlola was delivered of the baby boy in the toilet while she was going for an exam. She was accused of attempting to flush the baby.

    Denying the claim, she said: “Why would I flush or kill my baby after going through pains of carrying it for nine months. I am not heartless and I thank God for my life and for the safe delivery. I know God has the best for me and my baby.”

    For days, the incident was the topic of discussion among students, who were waiting for the day they would hold the naming ceremony.

    Naming the baby, students from Awolowo, Angola and Mozambique halls, in a procession, wore funny attires including cassock and Muslim turban. They gathered at the entrance of the Moremi Hall, singing all sorts of religious songs, which preceded the ‘naming’ rite.

    On hearing the sound of drums, occupants of the hall trooped out to see what was going on. Anchoring the ceremony, a student, who was selected among the Awolowo Hall boys, called on dignitaries such as pastor, Imam and Oluwo, who all prayed for the child.

    Also recognised was a ‘professor’, who called himself the baby’s uncle. A student, who mimicked Prof Bamitale Omole, the Vice-Chancellor, declared the ceremony opened.

    Paroxysm of laughter greeted each prayer offered by the clerics. In his sermon before the naming, the ‘Islamic cleric’, who called himself Alfa, took his time to ‘advise’ other occupants of Moremi Hall not to go to toilet in exam period. He urged them to be more “cautious” in dealing with “emotional struggle” on campus.

    Alfa, who recited some verses, concluded his exhortation, enjoining the parents of the baby to take care of him and avoid the re-occurrence of turning the hall’s toilet to labour room.

    Singing from the ‘Awo hymn book’, the ‘Awo choir’ sang praise songs to usher in the cleric that would perform the onerous task of calling out the names of the baby. This time, the ‘father’ and ‘mother’ of the baby were seen having a conversation and writing on the sheet of paper. This elicited laughter from the onlookers.

    “In the name of Almighty God, we give our baby the following names, Moremibiyi, (Moremi gave birth to this), Morounmobo ni university (I came back with a gift from the university), Awobola (Awolowo gave birth to wealth), Esi idanwo leyi (this is the result of examination) and Special Elective.

    The students gave the baby matriculation number MOR/2013/001, saying the baby was the first student to be admitted in the session.

    At the end of the ceremony, refreshment was served and donations were made for the baby. Popcorn wrapped in light nylon was distributed to the ‘well wishers’ and onlookers, who were dazed by the delivery of the drama.

    The ‘naming ceremony’ also featured comedy, dancing and music rendition by Awo boys.

    Esther Awoyemi, an occupant of Moremi Hall, described the display as entertaining, calling it a free comedy show.

    In an interview, one of the ‘choristers’ who did not mentioned his name, said the reason behind the display was “not to ridicule the mother or child in anyway”, but to “educate, entertain and propagate the spirit of Aro (joke), which the Awolowo Hall is known for.”

     

  • Joining issues with the National Assembly

    Femi Falana is one Nigerian that needs no introduction, from his days as an undergraduate in the then University of Ife, Ile Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University), the lawyer and human rights activist who at a time was the former president of the National Association of Democratic Lawyers and former chairman of the West African Bar Association (WABA), has always been at the forefront in the quest for justice and fairness in society. Falana became a human rights activist as early as 1983 when he took bail of some university students who had been unlawfully remanded in prison custody; he is still in the fight to date. He is renowned for providing free legal services to the poor and disadvantaged, and as is often the case, he has been detained numerous times by the security agencies for his activism.

    He was the lead speaker at the just concluded 11th Coca-Cola/NBC sponsored Campuslife Correspondents Workshop with the theme “Building a drug-free and non-cultist generation” in partnership with The Nation. The legal luminary walked into the venue of the workshop right on time and after exchanging pleasantries and receiving a loud and standing ovation from the more than 50 undergraduates from tertiary institutions across the country he got busy with his blackberry phone. I thought he was replying a text message, but it was when he started his lecture that we got to know that he was busy writing his lecture notes there and then!

    He came right from the onset with a smoking gun and took a rather unusual route to treating the topic of discussion; nothing was projected on the screen behind him as expected of most lectures and there were no “handouts” to pass around and some of our students were a bit confused when he started because he took a historical route to tackling the subject which only started making sense as he progressed.

    The popular analogy of President Goodluck Jonathan that he had no shoes when he was growing up which elicited millions of sympathy votes that brought him into power was the starting point of his presentation. “But most of us in his generation had no shoes, and where we do, they were only meant for special occasions like Christmas and Easter celebrations.” But in spite of this, the Nigerian state invested massively in their future to ensure that poverty is banished from the land by investing in education. Leading the way was the Western regional government in 1955 which laid the foundation for the educational advancement of the region so much so that by 1976 the Western model was adopted as a National education policy.

    Walking down memory lane, he pointed out that the Federal Government provided loans to students while state governments provided bursary allowance to reduce the burden of quality education on the students who even had the luxury of having laundry departments that took care of their laundry needs. Employers often pay regular visits to campuses to recruit prospective employees before the completion of their studies.

    Vacation jobs were also readily available and students have no reason to be idle, even secondary school leavers then registered with the ministry of labour and whenever there were vacancies in any of the factories scattered around Lagos they were contacted and given employment, this was at a time when there were no mobile phones.

    But all these, as our speaker stressed, may appear like tales from another planet due to the gross mismanagement of the economy from 1980, when “the dreams and aspirations of our youth were shattered, things got worse by 1986 when the regime of General Ibrahim Babangida introduced the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP). Babangida told the nation that there was ‘no alternative to SAP’, but it was merely a tool by western imperialist to pauperise Nigerians. Attempts by late Gani Fawehinmi, I and others to challenge the legality of SAP were truncated by the military.”

    Confessing that he was up all night monitoring the political development in Egypt and the lesson therein, Falana said the crisis is merely a “street protest” and not a “revolution” as is being erroneously portrayed because it clearly lacked all the elements and strategy of a revolution like clear cut leadership and goal. He likened Egyptian scenario to the June 12 agitation which they undertook after the annulment of the June 12 1993 election, which eventually forced General Babangida from power. “We had a street protest, but no strategy on how to take over power”, he added. He berated the $1.5 billion military aid to the Egyptian military by the United States government. “This amount is enough to wipe out poverty in Egypt. The US government is pumping this huge amount to the military to stifle a real revolution of the people from actually taking place. This is the main reason the US could not even call what actually happened by its real name “a military coup” because of the repercussion it would have.

    Next on the chopping block is the lacklustre student unionism on campuses. Nigeria, he pointed out, used to have a vibrant student unionism in the universities, but the military, in their bid to nib any resistance to their rule in the bud, frustrated students and lecturers unionism and by so doing systematically destroyed the intelligentsia and by implication the entire society. Without vibrant unions on campuses voices from the ivory tower was muffled and has degenerated to the level where student leaders are now appendages of various government houses in the country.

    Since voices of reason are now scarce, the generality of the people choose the route of religious fundamentalism which often leads to the closing down of public highways and roads by various religious organisations in the country. Our penchant for “religiosity” is what has resulted in billions of Naira being spent to sponsor the elites to religious pilgrimages to Mecca and Jerusalem. Those who loot the treasury go to Mecca and Jerusalem to pray weekly. “This is why there is no money to fund education”. Since 1999 also unemployment has assumed a dangerous proportion with corruption taking a never to be imagined direction where billions are looted from the public treasury without recourse to decorum.

    All these, according to him, lead to drug addiction, gangsters on campuses, exam malpractice and cultism in this generation which was not prominent in earlier generations. Our corrupt system thus destroyed merit and paved the way for permanent students on campuses. To this the students concurred and started naming names of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) officials who fall under this category.

    But despite these gloomy postulations, Falana feels there’s hope for genuine change if the youths actually yearn for it. “If the youths want genuine change in the society, they must convince themselves that it requires a surgery and must be done through sacrifice and mobilisation. You should expose your friends who are criminals before they come into position of power,” he said.

    He challenged the youth to take advantage of their share size of over 60 million to cause a change in the history of the country by using the internet effectively to drive home the point that they want and desire genuine change. Raising a very vital point about being disconnected from the process of governance, he encourage them to “join issues with the National Assembly” by ensuring that corrupt officials do not find life easy. He reminded them that when N2.8 billion was declared missing in the 1980s, 600 students from then University of Ife surrounded the then National Assembly complex in Lagos and that action forced the Federal Government to set up a commission of inquiry to investigate the issue. Students, he pointed out, can still do the same today by compelling the National Assembly to pass laws that are favourable to educational development and stiff against corruption and outright impunity.

    The second speaker, Mrs. Ngozi Ngwoke of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), handled the technical aspect of drug addiction which she said is difficult to separate from cultism because the two are intertwined, pointing out that there is no drug free society anywhere in the world. Anyone, she noted can fall victim of substance abuse with the most vulnerable being the 11-35-year bracket. At the end of the two-day workshop, the students were challenged to be change agents in their generation.

     

  • A workshop with a difference

    There is no greater joy for a journalist working in print media than seeing his works being published by his Editor.

    However, there is joy when one finds himself around young Nigerians, who have the nerve to bring about balanced and un-biased stories about happening in their various campuses, despite their tedious academic work.

    That was the kind of joy that went through me when I bought a copy of The Nation newspaper last Thursday and discovered that I had been selected alongside 49 others to attend student-writers’ workshop held in high-class Lekki part of Lagos.

    After an excursion to corporate headquaters of The Nation, we left for Citilodge Hotel, the venue of the workshop sponsored by Coca-Cola Nigeria Limited and Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC). We stopped by at the Ikeja Plant of the Coca Cola, which happens to be the biggest of all the 13 plants in the world. We had a tour round the facilities of the company and how they go about the various production processes. Peace Emele conducted the session.

    At the workshop session, Mr Femi Falana (SAN), a lawyer and right activist, was on hand to speak to us about the history of students’ struggle and governance. He went on to discuss how the economy of the country has collapsed to a very bad state and what must be done to salvage the situation. He told the stories of the good old days and how most of the present leaders enjoyed scholarship as undergraduates.

    The Lagos-based lawyer also mentioned how the late Gani Fawehinmi and the late Beko Ransome Kuti, himself and others fought for the mandate of Chief M.K.O. Abiola, the acclaimed winner of the June 12, 1993 general elections.

    A story, which particularly touched me was how he and his wife abandoned their home to sleep in hotels and locations that were not conducive due to the resolve of the then military government to eliminate pro-Abiola activists. He urged us to always stand for whatever is right on our campuses and be good ambassadors.

    I connect with Mr. Falana’s call for youths in Nigeria to come out en masse to participate in politics by voting in the right people. With a youth population estimated to be about 60 million, I believe this is an opportunity for us as young people to take our destinies into our hands and not just stand by and watch. This is not the time to be neutral and stand aloof since there is no other country we can call our own.

    With the rate of social vices and gross indiscipline among youths, I could not agree less that this year’s theme which was: Building up a drug free and non-cultist generation was timely.The second speaker, Mrs. Stella Ngwoke, Assistant Director Demand Reduction, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), explained reasons drugs could be dangerous to one’s health. She noted that not all drugs are harmful as some of them are used to cure people. She, however, warned that caffeine, nicotine, marijuana and the likes can destroy the brain by making it less functional, which can even lead cause madness.

    She made us know that alcohol is the most abused substance in the world because most people just take it with recklessness not knowing that it can be injurious to their health. She named liver problem, kidney malfunction and heart disease as some of the results of abuse of these substances.

    A particular fact that shocked me in the presentation was the disclosure that research showed that tobacco shortens lives by 10 years. As she pleaded to us, I am taking this news back to my campus as a warning to many of my colleagues not to put their life on the edge in the name of smoking.

    Mr Lekan Otufodunrin, the Online Editor of The Nation, who has been my mentor since my Industrial Attachment in the media outfit and Mr Emeka Mba, Community Affairs Manager of Coca Cola, added glitz to the workshop with their inspirational words. Mr Agbo Agbo, the husband of the Late Mrs Ngozi Agbo, pioneer Editor of CAMPUSLIFE, spoke about how he did not want the passion and drive behind the dream to die.

    Mr Wale Ajetumobi, coordinaor of CAMPUSLIFE, whose carriage and charisma showed that he is ably shouldering the responsibility of the project not only anchored the event but also gave better writing tips to help the students towards becoming better reporters.

    To me, the experience was fulfilling. Coming across young men and women from various parts of the country to seek knowledge is an indication that Nigeria still has young people who are leader to take up responsibility. I salute my colleagues from Northern part, who travelled down to Lagos to attend the workshop.

    I won’t forget how Nurudeen Yusuf of the Lagos State University (LASU) addressed himself as the Senior Advocate of LASU (SAL). I won’t also forget how Habeeb Whyte, Law graduate of the University of Ilorin (UNILORIN) took the microphone and sang a particular song, which elicited laughter from students during our dinner on Saturday. Also the “peaceful chaos” precipitated by the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) contingents, which consisted Femi Ogunjobi, Sikiru Akinola and the rest when Mr Falana walked in. The rendering of Great Ife anthem. Falana could not help but join in singing the anthem with them. Also the “Mother of the Day”, Hannah Ojo, a graduate of OAU, and the “Father of the Day”, Gilbert Alasa, 400-Level student of University of Benin (UNIBEN), were also wonderful throughout the workshop.

    Olatunji Awe of Ekiti State University (EKSU0, Tomiwa Bello of WOLEX Polytechni, Damilola Olayemi of Redeemer’s University, our “photographer” Sulaimon Hassan of NTA Television College, my roommate, Kingsley Amatanweze of University of Nigeria, Nsukka are just a few out of all the lovely youths who made my moments at the workshop memorable.

    Mr. Wale deserves commendation as he was everywhere to ensure the smooth flow of the workshop. Richard Adura-Ilesanmi from my school was also another person whose passion to learn from the speakers was burning.

    I will say a very big thank you to the Coca-Cola and NBC.

    Finally, I am using this medium to pay a tribute to the late Aunty Ngozi, who encouraged me while I was still a student in the Lagos State Polytechnic (LASPOTECH) to get stories from my campus and also improve on my writing. I remember how I got used to changing my countenance whenever she pronounced my name as “Sheagun”. She was a woman who always wanted the best for us.

    Segun, 100-Level Political Science, AAUA